Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
India

Reality Check: Modi government's media policy - keep them away?

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 20 Jul, 2014 07:15 AM
    It has been almost two months since Narendra Modi took charge as India's prime minister, but the new government is yet to spell out its media and information policy - except by default.
     
    All that journalists are able to surmise - in the absence of any official articulation - is that the Modi government wants to keep members of the fourth estate at an arm's length and feed them information crumbs - only when and what it wants to.
     
    Departing from the convention of naming a media adviser, one of the first acts of any new prime minister in a democracy, Modi has appointed 70-year-old veteran aide, Jagdish Thakkar, as only a Public Relations Officer (PRO), an indication by itself that Modi did not feel the need to have "media advice".
     
    Thakkar, a PRO during Modi's chief ministership in Gujarat and who is familiar with Modi's working style, is increasingly becoming infamous in media circles for not answering calls and, simply, just not being available.
     
    When a group of journalists cornered him at Parliament House recently, Thakkar gave no assurances and said he would only give them what he was asked to give - nothing more. 
     
    He also made no promise of answering journalists' calls or queries, a standard practice of a media or press adviser and part of his job profile.
     
    Modi's council of ministers also believe in evading the media - even those who were earlier friendly with the media and loved chatting with them.
     
    Any journalist seeking an interview with External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, who was known to be media-savvy and always available for a juicy anti-government byte as Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha, now gets a firm "no" in abrupt and unlikely response.
     
    It is widely known that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ministers have been told "not to speak to the media" unless an official line about the government's position is to be announced. 
     
    It was only after he presented his maiden budget July 10 that the otherwise media savvy Finance Minister Arun Jaitley gave interviews, but only to a select few.
     
    Only Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad and Information and Broadcasting Minister Prakash Javadekar, both former party spokesmen, are the ones who are seen on television and sometimes quoted in print.
     
    Senior bureaucrats, who under the previous UPA regime were welcoming to scribes, have been issued a gag order and asked not to "entertain" the media.
     
    "I am personally against such an order but cannot do much about it," an official in the urban development ministry told IANS, while making sure he was not going to be named.
     
    In fact, in some ministries, if a mediaperson is seen near a minister's office, in Parliament House, or in the ministries, they are rounded up and packed off.
     
    This was not so during the Manmohan Singh regime.
     
    Ministers and secretaries were ready to talk to mediapersons, give bytes and interviews and, in the last months, even against their own government.
     
    For the media, all this is new. From being treated as VIPs, mediapersons now suddenly feel they are "pariahs" in the new establishment.
     
    With tweets, Facebook and official releases being almost the sole "source" for news stories, many journalists openly share that getting an "exclusive" would now become difficult. It also means that everyone will get the news at the same time.
     
    "No minister is willing to talk. Even taking an appointment to meet the secretary has become extremely difficult. These are not good signs," a seasoned journalist who did not wish to be identified told IANS.
     
    Human Resource Development (HRD) Minister Smriti Irani, who was caught in a controversy over her educational qualification, has been meeting journalists in informal groups. On one such occasion, she pulled them up for writing stories that projected her negatively.
     
    Like her, many of her cabinet colleagues are yet to call a formal press conference to spell out policies and plans for their ministries.
     
    Journalist and commentator Swapan Dasgupta, however, feels it is a "media impression that the council of ministers is avoiding them".
     
    "It is in any case not a public issue. It's a media issue," Dasgupta, known to be close to the ruling establishment, told IANS.
     
    The only formal interaction of the media with any minister was when Javadekar called journalists for dinner July 16. It was also interesting that on the same day and at the same place - India Habitat Centre, but in a different venue - Neelam Kapur, principal director general of the Press Information Bureau (PIB), had also invited senior journalists for dinner.
     
    However, on reaching the venue, journalists were told that the two events had been merged without giving an explanation. But Kapur did look subdued.
     
    Javadekar, when harried by journalists for an interview slot, was evasive. But journalists who hoped he would share information nuggets about the new regime, or the prime minister, were disappointed.
     
    The writing on the wall is clear - avoid the media so that they do not have anything to sensationalise or create controversies.
     
    Modi, who has stopped taking a large press party on his trips abroad and only takes official or demi-official media, may feel that keeping the media at a distance is the best media policy to have. 
     
    Veteran journalist Kuldip Nayar, who was the media adviser to late prime minister Lal Bahadur Shastri, feels the Modi administration should follow a clear media policy. 
     
    "The channels of communication should be open. The new government should have a transparent media policy. Media wants some kind of connection," Nayar told IANS.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Block rail, roads - go to jail in Punjab

    Block rail, roads - go to jail in Punjab
    Putting people to inconvenience and even causing suffering by blocking rail tracks and roads in Punjab could now have a legal complication for protesters. The state government has approved a bill under which blockade of rail and road traffic would attract punishment of up to one year in jail and even a penalty of Rs.100,000.

    Block rail, roads - go to jail in Punjab

    Britain faces mass strike by public sector workers

    Britain faces mass strike by public sector workers
    Britain is witnessing one of the biggest strikes by public sector employees in three years with up to one million people expected to take to the streets to protest pay freeze and pension changes as part of austerity measures, media reports said Thursday.

    Britain faces mass strike by public sector workers

    Ganga conservation in Jaitley's list of priorities

    Ganga conservation in Jaitley's list of priorities
    Cleaning Ganga, linking of rivers and beautification of river banks were on top of the agenda of Finance Minister Arun Jaitley who set aside Rs.2,037 crore for an integrated Ganga development project in the union budget 2014-2015.

    Ganga conservation in Jaitley's list of priorities

    Modi regime's first budget gives tax sops, promises growth

    Modi regime's first budget gives tax sops, promises growth
    Tax payers could save on their salaries and consumer goods like TVs, soap, footwear, processed food and computers will cost less as the Rs.18-lakh crore ($300-billion) maiden budget of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government promised to arrest price rise, boost investor mood, cut expenditure and restore India's growth to 7-8 percent in three years.

    Modi regime's first budget gives tax sops, promises growth

    NRI questions FIR over uploading minister's morphed photo

    NRI questions FIR over uploading minister's morphed photo
    US-based Goan NRI Savio Almeida Wednesday questioned the move to book him for sharing on Facebook a morphed photo of Goa PWD Minister Sudin Dhavalikar wearing a pink swimsuit.

    NRI questions FIR over uploading minister's morphed photo

    India earned 40 mn euro launching foreign satellites

    India earned 40 mn euro launching foreign satellites
    He said the revenue earned through launch of foreign satellites was 39.82 million euros.

    India earned 40 mn euro launching foreign satellites